[Est. 1-31-28] Published Daily Except Saturday and Sunday [5c Per Copy] ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AUGUST 20, 1928, AT THE POSTOFFICE _AT TRYON, N. C. UNDER THE ACT OF CONGRESS, MARCH 3, 1879 IDE TI1Y1 DULY DLLLETI The World’s Smallest daily Newspaper, \ Seth M. Vining, Editor Vol. 25—No. 81 TRYON, N. C. THURSDAY, MAY 22ND, 1952 Weather Wednesday: High 80, low 56, Rel. Hum. 47. . . . The Railroad and Labor dispute settled after three years. Workers get a raise in wages but not as much as they wanted .... Roads go back to private ownership after three years of government control .... Railroad Agent C. A. Pye of Try on reported this morning that be tween 35 and 50 members of the Hendersonville Elementary School Third Grade were scheduled to ar rive in Tryon by train today at 12:54 noon. They will be under the leadership of their teacher, Miss Joyce Shook. Parents of the ^ung people wiil meet them here |Bj take them home by automo Tryon’s Fourth Grade went to Hendersonville by train Wed nesday and The Times-News fea tured that 14 of them had never n'dden on a train. The Tryon children were shown through the newsDaner office there, the Cnee Cola plant and other places and had picnic lunch before returning to Tryon .... In an article on tV “Open House” at Berkeley Mills at Balfour this coming Fri day, Jimmy Fain writes, “Berke ley hopes that several thousand Henderson County neighbors will attend the party and see graphi cally how this industry fits into Confirmed on Back Page_ George Brannon Resigns From St. Luke’s Hospital Announcement was made today that George S. Brannon, member of the Board of Trustees of St. Luke’s Hospital, has resigned his post effective immediately. Mr., Brannon resigned for reasons of health. In announcing Mr. Brannon’s resignation, it was stated by the hospital’s board of trstees, “It is with great reluctance that we accede to Mr. Brannon’s request that he be relieved of the position he has filled so faithfully and suc cessfully. He has been of great assistance to the board of St. Luke’s, especially with regard to his sound and able advice on finan cial matters. It is with the deepest regret that we accept his resig nation.” His successor will be announced in a few days. PEACE Dr. George F. Taylor spoke to the Tryon Kiwanis Club Tuesday at Oak Hall on “Peace”. Dr. Taylor stated that you have to make a determined effort to have peace and that more effort and money should be spent on ways of peace. The speaker felt that we don’t do enough thinking from the Christain point of view. Dr. Taylor was very pleased with the United States’ present Point 4 program in which we have strived to hplp other people to help themselves. He felt that as long as people are hungry and un fed there would be unrest in the world, but that economic help alone would not be sufficient because people of all races want to be _Continued on Back Page

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view